Timothy Shanahan University of Illinois at Chicago www.shanahanonliteracy.com
Timothy ShanahanUniversity of Illinois at Chicagowww.shanahanonliteracy.com
Literacy levels are stagnant since 1971
ELL population has grown dramatically in U.S. schools over past 15 years
5.5 million English-language learners in public
schools (~11% of public school enrollment)
ELLs lag behind English-proficient peers in reading
Schools are trying hard
National Literacy Panel for Language Minority Children and Youth
Developing Literacy in Second-Language Learners
National Literacy Panel for Language Minority Children and Youth
Developing Literacy in Second-Language Learners
WWC Practice Guide
Effective Literacy and English Language Instruction for English Learners in the Elementary Grades
WWC Practice Guide
Effective Literacy and English Language Instruction for English Learners in the Elementary Grades
Mission:To conduct a comprehensive review of the
research literature on the development of literacy among Language Minority Children and Youth
1998-2000 the National Reading Panel determined what worked in literacy for the U.S. Congress NRP did not look at data on second-language students
Institute of Education SciencesAdditional support from
National Institute for Child Health and Human Development
Office of English Language Acquisition
Develop an objective research review methodologySearch the research literature on the development of literacy for English language learnersAnalyze the research literatureDevelop a final report with research findings and recommendations for research
Diane August, Principal Investigator, Center for Applied Linguistics,
Timothy Shanahan, Chair, University of Illinois at Chicago
Isabel Beck, University of Pittsburgh
Margarita Calderon, Johns Hopkins University
David Francis, University of Houston
Georgia Earnest Garcia, University of Illinois Urbana- Champaign
Esther Geva, O.I.S.E./University of Toronto
Fred Genesee, McGill University
Claude Goldenberg, California State University
Michael Kamil, Stanford University
Keiko Koda, Carnegie Mellon University
Gail McKoon, Northwestern University
Robert Rueda, University of Southern California
Linda Siegel, University of British Columbia
Relationship Between Oral Language Proficiency and Literacy: Fred Genesee and Esther Geva
Relationship Between First and Second Language Literacy: Michel Kamil
Development of Literacy: Linda Siegel and Keiko KodaInstructional Practices and Professional Development:
Timothy Shanahan, Isabel Beck, Diane August, Margarita Calderon
Social and Cultural Context: Claude Goldenberg and Robert Rueda
Assessment: Georgia Garcia and Gail McKoon
Language minority children and youth
Ages 3-18
Acquisition of literacy in their first language and the societal language
Empirical research
Peer-reviewed journals, dissertations, technical reports
Research published between 1980 and 2002
Additional subpanel criteria
Sought references in major reviews (August & Hakuta, 1997; Demmert & Towner, 2003; Fitzgerald, 1995a, 1995b; Garcia, 2000; Gersten & Baker, 2000a, 2000b; Greene, 1998; Kamil, et al., 2000; Rossell & Baker, 1996; Willig, 1985)Conducted six searches using on-line abstracting services including ERIC, PsycInfo, LLBA, Sociological Abstracts, MEDLINE, MLA BibliographyHand-searched key journals Located 1,800 potential research studies that met Panel criteria
IntroductionDevelopment of Literacy (second language oral proficiency and
second language literacy, sociocultural context)Cross-linguistic Relationships (first and second language oral
proficiency, first language oracy and second language literacy)Sociocultural Contexts (Immigration, family, discourse patterns,
etc.)Instruction and Professional Development (language of
instruction, effective literacy teaching, school and classroom practices and contexts, special education, professional development)
Assessment of Literacy (assessment, standardized assessments)Conclusions
NRP
Congressional Report
First-language only
K-12
“What Works” questions
Experimental studies only
NLP
IES Report
Second-language only
PreK-12
Wide range of questions
Wide range of research evidence appropriate to the questions
1. What are the differences and similarities in the development of literacy skills in societal language between language minority and native speakers?
2. What is the relationship between second language oral proficiency and second language literacy?
3. What is the influence of social and cultural factors on literacy attainment of language minority learners, in their native language and the societal language?
107 studies were accepted for inclusion in the review (of 578)
Criteria: published in a refereed journal since 1980, in English, focused on children ages 3-18, pertinent to questions
For some of the questions the subjects could be acquiring any societal language; for some it had to be English
Some findings:
Word reading and spelling skills of L2 can be equivalent to the word reading skills of L1 students (after some amount of instruction)
Fewer studies on the development of text level skills (reading comprehension=7, writing=0)
Non-equivalence of performance evident in text skills
Some findings:
Small to moderate positive relationships between English oral language proficiency and word recognition skills or spelling skills in English
English oral language proficiency is closely associated with reading comprehension skills in English (even when students have adequate word reading skills)
How do the following influence the attainment of L2 literacy outcomes?
Immigration
Discourse and interactional differences
Other culturally or socially rooted factors
Parents and families
District, state, and federal policies
Language status or prestige
Studies could be correlational, experimental, comparative, ethnographic, observational, or case study (quantitative or qualitative)
Only about 50 studies even met these parameters
Reviewers characterize it as a weak data base (both in terms of size and quality)
Few interventions and those that exist often did not have literacy outcomes or were not clearly sociocultural in nature
Fair to say the results of this analysis is to arrive at hypotheses
Little evidence that immigration, refugee experience, or language prestige impedes literacy achievement
There is little evidence that discourse and interactional differences influence literacy outcomes, or that instructional accommodations to discourse differences improve outcomes
Evidence that language minority parents are motivated to help in their children’s schooling and that schools can successfully encourage this (but little evidence of the impact on learning)
A. What should the language of instruction when teaching English as a second language?
B. Do children who come to English as a second language benefit from the same literacy teaching practices that help native English language students?
C. What else can be done to improve the literacy attainment of children and adolescents who are learning English as a second language?
Language minority students acquiring literacy in English as a societal language or literacy in their first language.
Studies Assigned: 319
Studies used to answer Question A: 15
Studies used to answer Question B: 18
Studies used to answer Question C: 23
Comparison of the impact of:
English immersion (submersion to structured)
vs.
Bilingual Education (transitional, dual, alternative immersion)
Previous Reviews
Baker & de Knater (1981): no difference
Willig (1985): bilingual effective
Rossell & Baker (1996): no difference
Greene (1997): bilingual effective
Slavin & Cheung (2004): bilingual effective
Compared bilingual with English only
Random assignment or pretesting/matching
Control groups
Any studies, that met criteria, and were done since 1980 or were from the previous reviews
Only English (not other languages)
At least 6 mos. of instruction
In school studies of language-minority students in English speaking countries
15 studies (71 effect sizes across 26 samples)
Effects sizes for all studies (.18)
Effect sizes for 5 RCT studies (.39-.45)
Same as for phonics
9 of 26 sample effect sizes favored bilingual, 4 favored immersion, the rest were equal
Biggest effect sizes for best studies
Bilingual education has a positive impact on English reading outcomes (small to moderate)
However, the successful bilingual programs introduced English early
Not just primary grades
Does enhanced teaching of literacy elements improve literacy for ELL students?
National Reading Panel found that teaching native speakers phonemic awareness, phonics, oral reading fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension strategies
But what about ELL students?
Criteria
• Students (ages 3-18) had to be learning English as a societal language•Published in peer reviewed journal (or doctoral dissertation or technical report) since 1980•Used experimental, quasi-experimental, multiple- baseline design without serious confounds
Numbers of studies
NRP NLPPhonemic awareness 51 --Phonics 38 5Oral reading fluency 16 2Vocabulary 45 3Comprehension strategies 205 3Writing --- 4
• Studies of elements of literacy suggest that the types of instruction that help in L1 are advantageous for L2 as well
•Effect sizes are lower, except for vocabulary
•Effect sizes always smaller if comprehension included
• Adjustments are needed, but these were rarely described in any detail
• Encouraging reading and writing (6)• Reading to children (3)• Tutoring and remediation (2)• Success for All (3) • Instructional Conversations (3)• Other interventions (6)
•Many of the innovations helped, but too little evidence on any to draw definitive conclusions (need for replication)
•Lowest effect sizes when comprehension included
•Encouraging reading in English helped, reading in home language did not help
1. Effective instruction for English learners emphasizes essential components of literacy
Phonemic awareness
Phonics
Oral reading fluency
Vocabulary
Comprehension
Writing
2. Effective instruction for English learners is similar to effective literacy instruction for native speakers
Instruction vs. curriculum
Programs (Reading Mastery, Corrective Reading, Jolly Phonics, Read Naturally, Success for All, etc.)
Instructional routines (such as those for teaching vocabulary)
3. Effective curriculum and instruction for English learners must be adjusted to meet their needs
Strategic use of first language
Enhanced instructional procedures
Adjustments for differences in knowledge
More explicit modeling and explanation
More use of pictures
4. Effective literacy instruction for English learners is comprehensive and multi-dimensional.
The whole curriculum
Substantial amount of instruction
Monitoring of learning
Etc.
5. Effective literacy instruction for English learners develops oral English proficiency.
Knowledge gap between English learners and native speakers (comprehension)
Power of vocabulary instruction
Limits of simple vocabulary instruction
6. Effective literacy instruction for English learners is differentiated.
Generally, these students do not have learning problems (same incidence as in L1)
Different languages, different amounts of experience with English, individual differences in success with various reading variables
7. Effective literacy instruction for English learners requires well-prepared teachers.
Recruitment of qualified teachers
Professional development in literacy and language instruction
Maintaining a well-trained teaching force
8. Effective literacy instruction for English learners is respectful of the home language.
Bilingual approaches
Use of home language to teach English
August, D., & Shanahan, T. (Eds.). (2006). Developing literacy in second-language learners. New York: Routledge.
August, D., & Shanahan, T. (Eds.). (2008). Developing reading and writing in second-language learners. New York: Routledge.
All author and editor royalties go to the International Reading Association to support publications, projects, and initiatives aimed at the needs of second-language literacy learners.
Timothy ShanahanUniversity of Illinois at Chicagowww.shanahanonliteracy.com